Occulus rift: what is all the fuss about?
ALIA Information Online 2015 Conference, 2-5 February Sydney : at the edge
This conference workshop discusses the virtual reality head-mounted display, the Oculus Rift, and how it can be used in libraries.
ALIA Information Online 2015 Conference, 2-5 February Sydney : at the edge
This conference workshop discusses the virtual reality head-mounted display, the Oculus Rift, and how it can be used in libraries.
ALIA Information Online 2015 Conference, 2-5 February Sydney: at the edge
This conference presentation (PowerPoint slides) discusses the future library trends outlined in the 2014 NMC Academic Library Horizon Trends report and how they apply to Australian academic libraries.
ALIA Information Online 2015 Conference, 2-5 February Sydney: at the edge
This conference paper discusses the future library trends outlined in the 2014 NMC Academic Library Horizon Trends report and how they apply to Australian academic libraries.
ALIA Information Online 2015 Conference, 2-5 February 2015, Sydney: at the edge.
National 2014 Conference, 15-19 September 2014 Melbourne : together we are stronger
ALIA National Conference provides the platform as a meeting point for all Library and Information professionals, from all sectors and all areas of Australia and the international community.
This submission from the Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) and the Australian Law Librarians' Association (ALIA) to the Australian law reform commission inquiry into copyright and the digital ecomony discusses the possible reform of Australia's copyright law to benefit the digital economy.
This paper is submitted as feedback to the IHPA (Independent Hospital Pricing Authority) public consultation paper prepared by Paxton Partners ‘Teaching, training and research costing study’ issued in December 2014.
The Executive of HLA is greatly concerned at the omission in the public consultation paper of the role performed by health libraries, and by information technology in general, in the paper prepared by Paxton Partners on the creation of an appropriate classification (costing study) for teaching, training and research (TTR).
ALIA welcomes the Australian Government’s commitment to online safety for children but we are concerned that creating a new position may not achieve as much as investing in existing programs and activities.
ALIA would like Australian Standards to be freely available through libraries to the citizens who have effectively funded their development, and we hope this Inquiry will be able to identify measures that will indeed improve public access.
In order to maximise the potential of libraries to support the international student experience, on campus and remotely, funding must be made available for the very latest resources and we ask the Australian Government to recognise this in its final report detailing the national strategy for international education.